-
Glenlair, near the
village of
Corsock in the
historical county of Kirkcudbrightshire, in
Dumfries and Galloway, was the home of the
physicist James Clerk...
- Elizabeth, who died in infancy. When
Maxwell was
young his
family moved to
Glenlair, in Kirkcudbrightshire,
which his
parents had
built on the
estate which...
-
Headstones of the Rigby-Murrays in the
burial enclosure at
Parton Kirk.
Glenlair Glenlair Bridge "Pulpit of oak from
Parton Church".
National Museums of Scotland...
-
included villas at
Cardoness (1828), for Sir
David Maxwell, Baronet, and
Glenlair,
Corsock (1830), home of
mathematician and
theoretical physicist James...
-
Benjamin Blyth) (1861)
Glenlair Bridge near Corsock, Kirkcudbrightshire, (1861)
built for his cousin,
James Clerk Maxwell who
owned Glenlair House Cluny Harbour...
-
originates at Loch Urr and
flows for thirty-five
miles southwards past Corsock,
Glenlair, Auchendolly,
Bridge of Urr,
Haugh of Urr, and
close to Dalbeattie, via...
- the
cousin to whom
James wrote. The
couple moved to the
Maxwell estate,
Glenlair, in 1865, with
James using this time to
write up some of his key work....
-
Corsock farm and
would later name this
Glenlair House. The
Clerk Maxwell family moved permanently to
Glenlair when
James was two
years old. Maxwell’s...
- GenUKI.org Vale of Urr, at
GlenLair.org
Previously unpublished records for the
parish of Urr, at DonJaggi.net
River Urr, at
GlenLair.org
Motte of Urr, at ScottishPlaces...
-
author of
Treatise on
Electricity and Magnetism, 1873.
Maxwell lived at
Glenlair, he died in 1879 and is
buried in the
churchyard at
Parton Kirk. His work...